This can be made to work in certain circumstances when
cross-compiling, so default to not building g-i stuff
when cross-compiling, but allow it if introspection was
enabled explicitly via -Dintrospection=enabled.
See gstreamer/gstreamer#454 and gstreamer/gstreamer#381.
This means we can use some newer features and get rid of some
boilerplate code using the G_DECLARE_* macros.
As discussed on IRC, 2.44 is old enough by now to start depending on it.
This suppresses the annoying 'g-ir-scanner: link: cc ..' output
that we get even if everything works just fine.
We still get g-ir-scanner warnings and compiler warnings if
we pass this option.
We need a nested extern in our init section for the scanner binary
so we can call gst_init to make sure GStreamer types are initialised
(they are not all lazy init via get_type functions, but some are in
exported variables). There doesn't seem to be any other mechanism to
achieve this, so just remove that warning, it's not important at all.
Allow fallback to orc subproject if any, and add missing orc version check.
Additionally 'dependencies' keyword is removed from find_library,
because it's invalid keyword for find_library.
There was a mismatch between the .pc files generated by
autotools and by meson that would lead to meson not detecting
that opengl api is available even though it is. This could
lead to build failures when building -bad with meson against
a -base that was built with autotools. The mismatch has now
been rectified but we will still check the old one for backwards
compatibility.
Allow run some unit tests on Windows.
* Add dependency explicitly for some test cases, otherwise plugins couldn't be
loaded on uninstalled environment of Windows.
* Add missing GST_PLUGIN_LOADING_WHITELIST on meson build.
ACM is an ancient legacy API, and there's no point in
keeping it around for a licensed mp3 decoder now that
mp3 patents have expired and we have a decoder in -good.
We didn't ship this in cerbero anyway. If there's a good
case for the AAC encoder (which is LC only anyway) someone
should write a new plugin based on current APIs, that can
actually be built out of the box.
Fixes#850
For each lib we build export its own API in headers when we're
building it, otherwise import the API from the headers.
This fixes linker warnings on Windows when building with MSVC.
The problem was that we had defined all GST_*_API decorators
unconditionally to GST_EXPORT. This was intentional and only
supposed to be temporary, but caused linker warnings because
we tell the linker that we want to export all symbols even
those from externall DLLs, and when the linker notices that
they were in external DLLS and not present locally it warns.
What we need to do when building each library is: export
the library's own symbols and import all other symbols. To
this end we define e.g. BUILDING_GST_FOO and then we define
the GST_FOO_API decorator either to export or to import
symbols depending on whether BUILDING_GST_FOO is set or not.
That way external users of each library API automatically
get the import.
While we're at it, add new GST_API_EXPORT in config.h and use
that for GST_*_API decorators instead of GST_EXPORT.
The right export define depends on the toolchain and whether
we're using -fvisibility=hidden or not, so it's better to set it
to the right thing directly than hard-coding a compiler whitelist
in the public header.
We put the export define into config.h instead of passing it via the
command line to the compiler because it might contain spaces and brackets
and in the autotools scenario we'd have to pass that through multiple
layers of plumbing and Makefile/shell escaping and we're just not going
to be *that* lucky.
The export define is only used if we're compiling our lib, not by external
users of the lib headers, so it's not a problem to put it into config.h
Also, this means all .c files of libs need to include config.h
to get the export marker defined, so fix up a few that didn't
include config.h.
This commit depends on a common submodule commit that makes gst-glib-gen.mak
add an #include "config.h" to generated enum/marshal .c files for the
autotools build.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=797185
This uses the new path for OpenCV headers. OpenCV now have
master headers files per modules, which reduce the amount of
required includes. Note that HIGHGUI was included to get the
imgcodecs includes, which I fixed, though the master header is
missing the C headers, so I included that directly. All the
image stuff should be ported to C++ eventually. Finally, this
patch also update the header checks to reflect the modules that
are really being used.
add_global_arguments() can't be used in subprojects. It's
entirely possible that -bad is a subproject but gstreamer
is picked up from an installed location, so we should
really use add_project_arguments() in both cases.